Monday, July 14, 2014

Police altered official crime statistics to make hundreds of burglaries disappear, a Herald on Sunday investigation has found.

A damning report obtained by the newspaper reveals the burglaries were instead recorded as more minor crimes, or as incidents, which are not counted in crime statistics at all.

Five police staff, including then area commander Gary Hill, were sanctioned over the incident, and an "extremely disappointed" Police Minister, Anne Tolley, has moved to reassure the public this is an isolated incident.

Crime stats are a tier 1 statistic - something "of high public interest" and "essential to critical decision-making" which therefore requires long-term, impartial, accurate statistics. Manipulating these statistics may mean we get policy based not on evidence, but on lies. The people who manipulated them almost certainly violated the Statistics Act 1975, and offence for which they could be prosecuted. Insofar as they were paid bonuses or advanced based on their "success" reflected in these false statistics, they may also have committed fraud. But naturally, no-one was charged, because the police do not think they are subject to the same laws they enforce on others. But the net result is again to further undermine the public standing of the police, and therefore their ability to do their jobs effectively...